Texas 2023 - 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2660 Latest Draft

Bill / Enrolled Version Filed 05/27/2023

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                            H.B. No. 2660


 AN ACT
 relating to duties and procedures and to training programs for law
 enforcement agencies regarding missing children and missing
 persons.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  This Act may be cited as Tim's Law.
 SECTION 2.  Article 2.13(c), Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c)  It is the duty of every officer to take possession of a
 child under Article 63.00905(g) [63.009(g)].
 SECTION 3.  The heading to Article 63.009, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 Art. 63.009.  LAW ENFORCEMENT REQUIREMENTS GENERALLY.
 SECTION 4.  Articles 63.009(a), (d), and (f), Code of
 Criminal Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A law enforcement agency, on receiving a report of a
 [missing child or] missing person, shall:
 (1)  [if the subject of the report is a child and the
 child is at a high risk of harm or is otherwise in danger or] if the
 subject of the report is a person who is known by the agency to have
 or is reported to have chronic dementia, including Alzheimer's
 dementia, whether caused by illness, brain defect, or brain injury,
 immediately start an investigation in order to determine the
 present location of the [child or] person;
 (2)  if the subject of the report is a [child or] person
 other than a [child or] person described by Subdivision (1), start
 an investigation with due diligence in order to determine the
 present location of the [child or] person;
 (3)  immediately, but not later than two hours after
 receiving the report, enter the name of the [child or] person into
 the clearinghouse and the national crime information center missing
 person file if the [child or] person meets the center's criteria,
 and report that name to the Alzheimer's Association Safe Return
 emergency response center if applicable, with all available
 identifying features such as dental records, fingerprints, other
 physical characteristics, and a description of the clothing worn
 when last seen, and all available information describing any person
 reasonably believed to have taken or retained the [missing child
 or] missing person;
 (4)  not later than 48 hours after receiving the
 report, electronically submit to each municipal or county law
 enforcement agency within 200 miles the report and any information
 that may help determine the present location of the person;
 (5)  not later than the 60th day after the date the
 agency receives the report, enter the name of the [child or] person
 into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, with all
 available identifying features such as dental records,
 fingerprints, other physical characteristics, and a description of
 the clothing worn when last seen, and all available information
 describing any person reasonably believed to have taken or retained
 the [missing child or] missing person; and
 (6) [(5)]  inform the person who filed the report of
 the [missing child or] missing person that the information will be:
 (A)  entered into the clearinghouse, the national
 crime information center missing person file, and the National
 Missing and Unidentified Persons System; [and]
 (B)  reported to the Alzheimer's Association Safe
 Return emergency response center if applicable; and
 (C)  submitted to each municipal or county law
 enforcement agency within 200 miles.
 (d)  If a local law enforcement agency investigating a report
 of a [missing child or] missing person obtains a warrant for the
 arrest of a person for taking or retaining the [missing child or]
 missing person, the local law enforcement agency shall immediately
 enter the name and other descriptive information of the person into
 the national crime information center wanted person file if the
 person meets the center's criteria. The local law enforcement
 agency shall also enter all available identifying features,
 including dental records, fingerprints, and other physical
 characteristics of the [missing child or] missing person. The
 information shall be cross-referenced with the information in the
 national crime information center missing person file.
 (f)  Immediately after the return of a [missing child or]
 missing person or the identification of an unidentified body, the
 local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction of the
 investigation shall:
 (1)  clear the entry in the national crime information
 center database; and
 (2)  notify the National Missing and Unidentified
 Persons System.
 SECTION 5.  Subchapter A, Chapter 63, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Article 63.00905 to read as
 follows:
 Art. 63.00905.  LAW ENFORCEMENT REQUIREMENTS FOR REPORT OF
 MISSING CHILD. (a)  Regardless of the jurisdiction in which the
 child went missing, a law enforcement agency, on receiving a report
 of a missing child, shall:
 (1)  immediately start an investigation in order to
 determine the present location of the child;
 (2)  immediately, but not later than two hours after
 receiving the report, enter the name of the child into the
 clearinghouse and the national crime information center missing
 person file if the child meets the center's criteria, with all
 available identifying features such as dental records,
 fingerprints, other physical characteristics, and a description of
 the clothing worn when last seen, and all available information
 describing any person reasonably believed to have taken or retained
 the missing child;
 (3)  immediately, but not later than two hours after
 the agency receives the report, enter the applicable information
 into the Texas Law Enforcement Telecommunications System or a
 successor system of telecommunication used by law enforcement
 agencies and operated by the Department of Public Safety;
 (4)  not later than 48 hours after receiving the
 report, electronically submit to each municipal or county law
 enforcement agency within 200 miles the report and any information
 that may help determine the present location of the child;
 (5)  not later than the 30th day after the date the
 agency receives the report, enter the name of the child into the
 National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, with all
 available identifying features such as dental records,
 fingerprints, other physical characteristics, and a description of
 the clothing worn when last seen, and all available information
 describing any person reasonably believed to have taken or retained
 the missing child; and
 (6)  inform the person who filed the report of the
 missing child that the information will be:
 (A)  entered into the clearinghouse, the national
 crime information center missing person file, and the National
 Missing and Unidentified Persons System; and
 (B)  submitted to each municipal or county law
 enforcement agency within 200 miles.
 (b)  A local law enforcement agency, on receiving a report of
 a child missing under the circumstances described by Article
 63.001(3)(D) for a period of not less than 48 hours, shall
 immediately make a reasonable effort to locate the child and
 determine the well-being of the child. On determining the location
 of the child, if the agency has reason to believe that the child is a
 victim of abuse or neglect as defined by Section 261.001, Family
 Code, the agency:
 (1)  shall notify the Department of Family and
 Protective Services; and
 (2)  may take possession of the child under Subchapter
 B, Chapter 262, Family Code.
 (c)  The Department of Family and Protective Services, on
 receiving notice under Subsection (b), may initiate an
 investigation into the allegation of abuse or neglect under Section
 261.301, Family Code, and take possession of the child under
 Chapter 262, Family Code.
 (d)  Information not immediately available when the original
 entry is made shall be entered into the clearinghouse, the national
 crime information center file, and the National Missing and
 Unidentified Persons System as a supplement to the original entry
 as soon as possible.
 (e)  If a local law enforcement agency investigating a report
 of a missing child obtains a warrant for the arrest of a person for
 taking or retaining the missing child, the local law enforcement
 agency shall immediately enter the name and other descriptive
 information of the person into the national crime information
 center wanted person file if the person meets the center's
 criteria. The local law enforcement agency shall also enter all
 available identifying features, including dental records,
 fingerprints, and other physical characteristics of the missing
 child. The information shall be cross-referenced with the
 information in the national crime information center missing person
 file.
 (f)  Immediately after the return of a missing child, the
 local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction of the
 investigation shall:
 (1)  clear the entry in the national crime information
 center database; and
 (2)  notify the National Missing and Unidentified
 Persons System.
 (g)  On determining the location of a child, other than a
 child who is subject to the continuing jurisdiction of a district
 court, an officer shall take possession of the child and shall
 deliver or arrange for the delivery of the child to a person
 entitled to possession of the child. If the person entitled to
 possession of the child is not immediately available, the law
 enforcement officer shall deliver the child to the Department of
 Family and Protective Services.
 SECTION 6.  Article 63.0091, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 63.0091.  LAW ENFORCEMENT REQUIREMENTS REGARDING
 REPORTS OF CERTAIN MISSING CHILDREN. (a) The public safety
 director of the Department of Public Safety shall adopt rules
 regarding the procedures for a local law enforcement agency on
 receiving a report of a missing child who:
 (1)  had been reported missing on four or more
 occasions in the 24-month period preceding the date of the current
 report;
 (2)  is in foster care or in the conservatorship of the
 Department of Family and Protective Services and had been reported
 missing on two or more occasions in the 24-month period preceding
 the date of the current report; or
 (3)  is [under 14 years of age and otherwise determined
 by the local law enforcement agency or the Department of Public
 Safety to be] at a high risk of human trafficking, sexual assault,
 exploitation, abuse, or neglectful supervision for any reason the
 agency considers to be high risk, including because the missing
 child:
 (A)  disappeared while in a dangerous
 environment;
 (B)  has mental or behavioral health needs;
 (C)  previously exhibited signs of mental
 illness;
 (D)  has an intellectual or developmental
 disability; or
 (E)  is known to have been last seen or in
 communication with an adult unknown to the child's family or legal
 guardian.
 (b)  The rules adopted under this article must require that:
 (1)  in entering information regarding the report into
 the national crime information center missing person file as
 required by Article 63.00905(a)(2) [63.009(a)(3)] for a missing
 child described by Subsection (a), the local law enforcement agency
 shall indicate, in the manner specified in the rules, that the child
 is at a high risk of harm and include relevant information
 regarding:
 (A)  any prior occasions on which the child was
 reported missing; and
 (B)  the circumstances considered when
 designating the child as high risk; and
 (2)  the local law enforcement agency that receives a
 report of a missing child described by Subsection (a)(3) shall:
 (A)  reasonably escalate the response; and
 (B)  immediately, but not later than two hours
 after receiving the report, notify all law enforcement agencies
 within 100 miles, including agencies from other states, of the
 circumstances and high risk designation of the missing child.
 (c)  If, at the time the initial entry into the national
 crime information center missing person file is made, the local law
 enforcement agency has not determined that the requirements of this
 article apply to the report of the missing child, the information
 required by Subsection (b)(1) [(b)] must be added to the entry
 promptly after the agency investigating the report or the
 Department of Public Safety determines that the missing child is
 described by Subsection (a).
 SECTION 7.  Section 1701.253, Occupations Code, is amended
 by adding Subsection (q) to read as follows:
 (q)  As part of the minimum curriculum requirements, the
 commission shall establish a basic education and training program
 on missing children and missing persons, including instruction on
 the associated reporting requirements under Chapter 63, Code of
 Criminal Procedure.  An officer shall complete the program not
 later than the second anniversary of the date the officer is
 licensed under this chapter unless the officer completes the
 program as part of the officer's basic training course.
 SECTION 8.  Subchapter F, Chapter 1701, Occupations Code, is
 amended by adding Section 1701.2581 to read as follows:
 Sec. 1701.2581.  VOLUNTARY ADVANCED EDUCATION AND TRAINING
 PROGRAM ON MISSING CHILDREN AND MISSING PERSONS. The commission
 shall make available to each officer a voluntary advanced education
 and training program on missing children and missing persons. The
 program must include instruction on the associated reporting
 requirements under Chapter 63, Code of Criminal Procedure.
 SECTION 9.  The following provisions of the Code of Criminal
 Procedure are repealed:
 (1)  Articles 63.009(a-1), (a-2), and (g); and
 (2)  Article 63.0092.
 SECTION 10.  The changes in law made by this Act to Chapter
 63, Code of Criminal Procedure, apply only to the report of a
 missing person or missing child that is made to a law enforcement
 agency on or after the effective date of this Act.  The report of a
 missing person or missing child that is made to a law enforcement
 agency before the effective date of this Act is governed by the law
 in effect when the report was made, and the former law is continued
 in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 11.  Section 1701.253(q), Occupations Code, as added
 by this Act, applies only to a person who submits an application for
 a peace officer license under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code, on or
 after January 1, 2025. A person who submits an application for a
 peace officer license under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code, before
 January 1, 2025, is governed by the law in effect immediately before
 the effective date of this Act, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 12.  Not later than December 1, 2024, the Texas
 Commission on Law Enforcement shall:
 (1)  establish the training programs required by
 Sections 1701.253(q) and 1701.2581, Occupations Code, as added by
 this Act; and
 (2)  adopt the rules necessary to implement Sections
 1701.253(q) and 1701.2581, Occupations Code, as added by this Act.
 SECTION 13.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.
 ______________________________ ______________________________
 President of the Senate Speaker of the House
 I certify that H.B. No. 2660 was passed by the House on May 2,
 2023, by the following vote:  Yeas 143, Nays 1, 3 present, not
 voting; and that the House concurred in Senate amendments to H.B.
 No. 2660 on May 25, 2023, by the following vote:  Yeas 142, Nays 0,
 2 present, not voting.
 ______________________________
 Chief Clerk of the House
 I certify that H.B. No. 2660 was passed by the Senate, with
 amendments, on May 18, 2023, by the following vote:  Yeas 30, Nays
 1.
 ______________________________
 Secretary of the Senate
 APPROVED: __________________
 Date
 __________________
 Governor